Friends of the Somme - Mid Ulster Branch  
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Date Information
01/05/2020 02078
15/02/2019
15/02/2019 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated 31st October 1918: Private D Curran Killed
15/02/2019 Mrs Curran, Oldtown, Cookstown, has received notification that her son, Private David Curran, Royal Inniskillings, died at No 44 Clearing Station on 23rd October, from wounds received in action on 14th. A previous message intimated that he had been severely wounded on both legs, one having to be amputated. An army chaplain writes giving particulars, and adding that he had seen the boy constantly while in the Clearing Station, and that he spoke much of his mother and family. The letter concludes:-
15/02/2019 ‘I know how sore your heart will be, and that your home will be desolate without him. But I hope you will try to remember that your loss is his gain, and it is well with your boy. Everything was done for him that was, humanly speaking, possible, but his wounds were so severe that he passed away on 23rd about 4 o’clock.’
15/02/2019 Private Curran, who was only nineteen years of age, was held in great regard by all who knew him, and his death is generally regretted.
15/02/2019 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated 31st October 1918:
15/02/2019 CURRAN - At No 44 Clearing Station on 23rd October, from wounds received in action on 14th, Private David Curran, Royal Inniskillings loved son of Mrs Curran, Oldtown Cookstown, aged 19 years.
15/02/2019 ** price of victory and peace,
15/02/2019 ** blood and life is paid –
15/02/2019 ** son is lowly laid.
15/02/2019 ** help the mother’s riven heart,
15/02/2019
24/08/2017 Last Will and Testament of Private David George Curran dated 11th June 1918:
24/08/2017 In the event of my death, I give the whole of my property and effects to my mother Mrs Elizabeth Curran, 51 Oldtown Street, Cookstown, Co Tyrone. Rifleman 333, 4th Royal Irish Rifles.
24/08/2017 David’s elder brother, Private Samuel J Curran, was also killed in the war. He was killed in action two years earlier on 21st November 1916.
24/08/2017
09/04/2017 The family were all born in the Cookstown area.
09/04/2017
09/04/2017 Private David Curran was serving with the 1st Battalion of the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers when he was seriously wounded in both legs on 14th October 1918 in France.
09/04/2017 Private David Curran, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, son of Mrs Curran, Oldtown Street, Cookstown, died in France on 23rd October from wounds received in action.
09/04/2017 David Curran was a son of David and Elizabeth Curran. David Curran married Elizabeth Maybin on 26th March 1894 in the district of Cookstown.
09/04/2017 Both surnames have various spellings throughout the records.
09/04/2017 David George Curran was born on 3rd October 1899. Military records suggest he was born in Derrylun, County Tyrone. No such place exists. It may be Derryloran.
09/04/2017 From the Belfast Newsletter dated 31st October 1918:
09/04/2017 Family: David Curran, Lizzie Curran, Mary Elizabeth Curran (born 16th March 1895), Samuel James Curran (born 15th June 1897), David George Curran (born 3rd October 1899), John Maybin Curran (born 9th August 1902), Margaret Jane Curran (born 16th July 1906), Annie Curran (born 30th July 1909).
09/04/2017 The 1911 census lists David George Curran as age 11 at house 11 in Oldtown Street, Cookstown. It shows that his mother was a widow.
09/04/2017 David Curran was employed at Gunning’s Factory in Milburn, Cookstown.
09/04/2017 David enlisted in Cookstown late in 1916.
09/04/2017 Private Curran had been through many of the campaigns towards the end of the First World War.
09/04/2017 Private Curran was taken to No 44 Casualty Clearing Station where one of his legs was amputated. Private Curran remained seriously ill and spent much of his time in the company of the chaplain of the station.
09/04/2017 Private David Curran died of his wounds on Wednesday 23rd October 1918.
09/04/2017 David originally served as a private with the Royal Irish Rifles, Service No 20/333.
30/12/2015
30/12/2015 Private David Curran, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, son of Mrs Curran, Oldtown Street, Cookstown, died in France on 23rd October 1918 from wounds received in action.
30/12/2015
30/12/2015 From the Tyrone Courier and Dungannon News dated Thursday 7 November 1918
30/12/2015 The CWGC record Private Curran as the son of David and Elizabeth Curran of Oldtown Street, Cookstown, Co. Tyrone.
30/12/2015 Private David Curran is commemorated on Cookstown Cenotaph, Gunning’s Factory Memorial (Royal British Legion Cookstown) and St. Luran’s Church of Ireland Roll of Honour Derryloran, Cookstown.
30/12/2015 Private David Curran is buried in Duhallow A.D.S Cemetery.
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